Dear there,
How do you read these articles? Especially the last one: Science Magazine.
The article most often, if not all, are subjects that I have no knowledge of and most often, every sentence contain a term, undefined, and require in depth background knowledge. For example, in this issue, Title "Biochemical and genomic data elucidate how fungal enzyme attacks polysaccharides", and my brain can only understand, "Data+verb, don't know what it means+how enzyme attacks+this object"
And it gets even crazier when you go down into the actual passage.
I made a similar post in TLS where the community recommends me just focus at the underlying logic and take undefined terms by its first letter (Like math, assume X is this junk)...
Any lights on how you will do it?
[I find these article great practice on RC and LR just because it is always wrote in a commanding voice on something that I have no idea about]
Comments
What was the main point of the article? What was the authors tone? Where there opposing views? Was there a shift? The more RC you do the more you will better understand what to "read for".
Someone once told me to use "puppies" or some other word that made you happy/relaxed vs widget to substitute with, when confronted with a term in RC that you weren't familiar with to lower anxiety. At first I thought it was silly, but you know what, it works.